Friday, August 30, 2013

The Book Blog

This meme was snaffled from The Plastic Mancunian who, like me, blogs about stuff - but we have very different views on the world - and that is a good thing.

But it let me think about books for a bit - and this is never a bad thing.

1. Favourite childhood
book?I used to love Enid Blyton - and remember loving "The Magic
Faraway Tree". When I was much younger, there was a Golden Book about the Saggy
Baggy Elephant and Mickey Mouse's picnic that I remember making my father read
to me again and again. he knew them by rote.

2. What are you reading
right now?JK Rowling's "The Casual Vacancy". If you've ever had the
misfortune to be on a committee or know somebody in local government, you will
understand...

3. What books do you
have on request at the library?To my shame, I don't have a library
card or visit libraries to borrow books - the only exception to this is when I'm
studying and I'll use the reference library.

4. Bad book
habit?

I have a bad habit of buying
books that look interesting from the ten dollar shop, then never reading them.
Or doing the buy three for the price of two (or occasionally nine for the price
of six - but I'm trying to stop that)

5. What do you currently have
checked out at the library?

See question three.

6. Do you have
an e-reader?No, but I have an iPad, which I'm starting to buy books
to read on that.

7. Do you prefer to read one book at a time, or
several at once?I normally have two or three on the go - a main book
that I'm reading and a couple that I've started, waiting to finish.

8. Have your reading habits changed since starting a blog?

No, not really. Maybe I read a
little less.

9. Least favourite book you read this year (so
far?)Kate Grenville's "Sarah Thornhill". We read it for book group -
and though not a bad book, I didn't resonate with it - and in general, I don't
resonate with Kate Grenville as an author. Nothing wrong with that - just not my
cup of tea.

10. Favourite book you've read this year?We
read it for book group - and I was thinking I was going to hate it - Christos
Tsiolkas's "Dead Europe". Confronting, gross, happless, unhappy and some of the
best writing I've witnessed in a very long time. Not for everybody
however.

11. How often do you read out of your comfort zone?

Not that often, but fairly
regularly. I like to be challenged. Then again, I don't really read science
fiction or fantasy. But I have the first Game of Thrones book on my iPad which
I'm enjoying.

12. What is your reading comfort zone?

Modern literature, modern
classics, good kids books a la Harry Potter and Artemis Fowl. I do read crap
too, just to make sure that I know what people are talking about - I've
unfortunately read Dan Brown, The Twilight books and 50 Shades of
Grey.

13. Can you read on the bus?

I can read on public transport
- though I have to be facing forward to read - if I'm sitting with my back
facing the front reading makes me feel sick.

14. Favourite place to
read?

On the tram, in bed, in the
Fitzroy Gardens sitting under a tree on a balmy day. Anywhere
really.

15. What is your policy on book lending?I'm good
with lending books to friends - and I will not necessarily demand that they give
them back, unless it's something I find very special. Case in point - The Book
Thief, which was loaned out on the proviso that it came back. My copy of "Gone
Girl" has gone walkabout. If it comes back, it comes back. If it doesn't, it
doesn't.

16. Do you ever dog-ear books?

Depends on how long it gets
stuck in my handbag. I try to keep them in reasonable condition, though I'm not
militant about not cracking the spine like my friend Bernadette. I do respect
them, but I could do better - average B.

17. Do you ever write in the
margins of your books?No.

18. Not even with text
books?Okay, I used to occasionally make marks in text books but it's
been a long time since I've done any study.

19. What is your favourite
language to read in?English, though I've read a couple of books in
French in my time.Saint-Exupery's "Le Petit Prince" is still a
favourite.

20. What makes you love a book?

Great characters, fearless
writing and strange situations.

21. What will inspire you to
recommend a book?When a book is one that I find hard to put down -
books that make you think and feel in equal measure - and this is a hard call. I
like books with twists (For example, Chris Cleeve's "The Other Hand" (or Little
Bee as it's known in some countries)

24. Favourite
biography?Oh, don't rubbish me for this. I've only read one or two
biographies in my time, so Kenneth Branagh's autobiography "Beginning" is a
favourite.

Kate Holden's "In My Skin" is
exceptionally written.

25. Have you ever read a self-help
book?Oh hell yeah. Though it's not a regular occurence and I tend to
get a couple of chapters in then throw them against the wall and pick them up
when I clean. Louise L Hay's "You Can Heal Your Life" has had a huge positive
impact on my life.

26. Favourite cookbook?

My stepsister, JD, gave me a
dessert cook book called Delicious - I use it regularly - it's brilliant. My
flourless chocolate and raspberry mud cake comes out of it.

27. Most
inspirational book you've read this year (fiction or non-fiction)?

I hate to say it, but Christos
Tsiolkas's "Dead Europe" - just from the quality of the writing.

In the last few years I would
name, "The Book Thief", "The Other Hand" and "Born to Run" up there in the
inspirational books.

The Twilight series. The first
book was great. The second was okay. The third was alright. By the fourth book I
was ready to clobber the author over the head with her word
processor.

30. How often do you agree with critics about a
book?About half the time. I can watch The Tuesday Night book club
show and normally find somebody to fight with. And I try look for the good in
most things, I'll normally find something to agree with - then again, there are
times when I don't agree at all.

31. How do you feel about giving
bad/negative reviews?I always temper my bad reviews with what I find
good in a book - but will then give the other side of things. Case in point. The
Great Gatsby. Hated it for many years - now love it - but I can see what some of
the negative press is about (like NOTHING happens)

32. If you could read in
a foreign language, which language would you choose?Probably French
as it wouldn't take too long to get my up to speed - and Spanish, as I want to
read Pablo Neruda in Spanish.

33. Most intimidating book you've ever
read?Probably Rushdie's "The Satanic Verses". Which I ended up
loving - wonderful book - even with the Fatwa.

34. Most intimidating
book you're too nervous to begin?

James Joyces "Ulysses". I dip
into it ever so often, then put it down - but I'd love to read it cover to cover
one day. I need to read Moby Dick at some stage too. Cloud Atlas was pretty
intimidating until you got into it (and it is wonderful - just takes a bit of
time to get there)

36. How many books do
you usually have checked out of the library at any given time?

None - as I don't have a
library card. Though when studying it's normally three or four.

37.
How often have you returned a book to the library unread?

See above - but one out of the
three uni library books I'd have out , one would be returned
unread.

38. Favourite fictional character?

In no order:

Pelagia and the Doctor from
"Captain Corelli's Mandolin

Little Bee from "The Other
Hand"

Atticus Finch in "To Kill a
Mockingbird"

Hermione Granger and Professor
McGonagall from the Harry Potter Series

Holly Short from the LEP Recon
Unit in the Artemis Fowl books

Amy in "Gone Girl" (You have to
love to hate her)

39. Favourite fictional villain?

Both are from kids books.
Severus Snape and from the Harry Potter Series. And Count Olaf from the A Series of Unfortunate Events.

40. Books I'm most likely to bring on vacation?

Normally I take something of
calibre and something that's a bit trashy - take the last trip to Bali - I took
The Crimson Petal and the White and the first "Game of Thrones"
Book.

41. The longest I've gone without reading.Probably a
few days. I get antsy when I don't read regularly.

42. Name a book
that you could/would not finish.I've had the second "50 Shades of
Grey" book half finished on my bedside table for over a year. It's that poorly
written that I doubt I will get back to it.

43. What distracts you
easily when you're reading?Music. People talking loudly on the tram.
Loud noise. I like reading when it's quiet.

45. Most disappointing film
adaptation?Not that I've seen it, but if I did, Captain Corelli's
Mandolin. I refuse to see it - I've heard it's bad - really bad. And it's my favourite book ever.

46. The most money I've
ever spent in the bookstore at one time?

Probably around $100 - buit in
my defence, I was doing Christmas shopping at the time.

47. How
often do you skim a book before reading it?

Occassionally - normally have a
look at the first page to see what it's about, but that is far as it goes.
Unless it is a cook book - that can be considered food porn.

48. What would cause you
to stop reading a book half-way through?If I tire of a book it is
normally by page 30. If something's becoming just plain boring I'll stop. The
second 50 Shades of Grey book is testement to this. Oh, another soft core
whipping scene. Ho hum.

49. Do you like to keep your books
organised?

Nope. they're generally not on
the floor - isn't that enough. Though most of the shelves are in vague genre
order. And the serious literature is grouped like with like.

50. Do
you prefer to keep books or give them away once you've read them?

A bit of both. I sell on or
give away popular fiction and things I know I'll never read again - and keep the
literature - which does get re-read from time to time.

51. Are
there any books you've been avoiding?There are a couple of things I
should get down to, other than Ulysses and Moby Dick. Dan Brown's last book - I
know I don't want to but I will.

53. A book you didn't expect to like but
did?The first Hunger Games book. Exceptional, in spite of the
hype.

54. A book that you expected to like but didn't?We
did a book at book group called "Tigers in Red Weather". Wasn't bad, but I
thought it would be better. It took me 20 years to appreciate The Great Gatsby
too - thought I would love it when I was a young adult - hated it. Love it
now.

55. Favourite
guilt-free, pleasure reading?Please don't tell anybody, but I do
have a soft spot for the following:

Dan Brown

Marion Keyes early stuff

Jane Green's early stuff

Anything that screams "You have
to read it!" (A la 50 Shades of Grey)

And I'm not above picking up a
Mills and Boon every now and then. But don't tell anybody.

2 comments:

Oh I am DEFINITELY doing this one. Great theme.I loved The Faraway Tree too and to my surprise so do my kids.You've reminded me I meant to read The Book Thief and the Kate Holden book - I must get onto that.